DEMOCRACY IS BETTER THAN MILITARY COUP - SECOND DEPUTY SPEAKER TO GHANAIANS

December 3, 2021
4 years ago

The Second Deputy Speaker of Parliament, Andrew Amoako Asiamah, has stated that Ghana's democracy is considerably superior to military tyranny.

At the very least, he continued, individuals are free to voice their opinions and differ on matters while still living in peace with one another, which he believes is beneficial to democracy.

His comments are on the back of the brouhaha which surrounded the approval of the 2022 budget in Parliament on Wednesday, December 1.

According to him, the various debates and pandemonium on the budget form part of the country's democracy and he hopes that the National Patriotic Party (NPP) caucus and the National Democratic Congress (NDC) caucus will come together to resolve the impasse.

“We are on it, we are proud of the democracy we are practicing. We are talking, everybody is talking. Whether it is good or bad we are entertaining it and that is the best way to go. We prefer this to allow somebody to pick a gun that, knows everything and puts the democracy that we are practicing aside. So we will welcome any suggestion that will improve the democracy that we are practicing," he said.

The House of Parliament approved the budget statement for 2022 in the absence of the Minority caucus on Tuesday, December 1, 2021.

Even though the budget was already rejected on Friday, November 26 by the Minority Caucus after the Majority Caucus had staged a walk-out, it was approved by the Majority.

The First Deputy Speaker, Joseph Osei Owusu, who presided over the meeting said the Speaker, Alban Bagbin, erred when he rejected the budget in favour of the Minority.

On Friday, November 26, the Minority Caucus, in a parliamentary meeting presided over by the Speaker, rejected the budget.

The Minority wanted the Agyapa deals and the e-levy policy in the budget retracted. They also wanted the budget to address the predicament of the victims of the tidal wave.

However, the Majority Caucus, in the absence of the Minority, overturned the previous judgement on the budget and approved it.

These two developments have rendered Ghanaians confused as they wonder if Parliament has adopted a double-track system.

On Wednesday, December 1, the Leaser of the NDC caucus, Inusah Iddrisu, moved a motion to reverse the approval of the budget.

According to him, the First Deputy Speaker while presiding over the sitting on Tuesday did not have a voting right and so the ruling was a "constitutional nullity."

In an attempt to justify the approval of the 2022 budget statement, the First Deputy Speaker, Joe Wise said a Deputy Speaker is not a Speaker.

According to him the argument on the number of Parliamentarians present during the budget's approval on Tuesday, November 30 is not convincing because he has a voting right.

“I am a member of Parliament, the Second Deputy Speaker is a Member of Parliament

Our work is to assist the Speaker. Any attempt to read and interpret the constitution to include Deputy Speakers is a misreading of the constitution, he said.

He explained that Deputy Speakers have voting right in Parliament during decision-taking and so he had the right to vote while presiding over the house yesterday.

“When the Speaker is not around either of us can preside so like any other member. That member does not lose his right of being a member of the House.”

The Deputy Speaker overruled the motion and this sparked an outburst between the two caucuses. 

The Minority caucus is of the view that the First Deputy Speaker cannot make a judgment in the Chamber since he said he is not a Speaker.

However, the Deputy Speaker said despite the controversies, democracy is still the best.